Transcript Slide 1

Table of Contents
Chapter: Energy
Section 1: The Nature of Energy
Section 2: Conservation of Energy
The Nature of Energy
1
What is energy?
• Wherever you are sitting as you read this,
changes are taking place—lightbulbs are
heating the air around them, the wind might
be rustling leaves, or sunlight might be
glaring off a nearby window.
• Every change that occurs—large or small—
involves energy.
The Nature of Energy
1
Change Requires Energy
• When something is able to change its
environment or itself, it has energy.
Energy is the ability to cause change.
• Anything that causes change must
have energy.
The Nature of Energy
1
Change Requires Energy
• You use energy to
arrange your hair to
look the way you
want it to.
• You also use energy
when you walk
down the halls of
your school between
classes or eat your
lunch.
The Nature of Energy
1
Different Forms of Energy
• Energy has several different forms—electrical,
chemical, radiant, and thermal.
• Is the chemical energy stored in food the same
as the energy that comes from the Sun or the
energy stored in gasoline?
The Nature of Energy
1
Different Forms of Energy
• Radiant energy from the Sun travels a
vast distance through
space to Earth,
warming the planet
and providing energy
that enables green
plants to grow.
The Nature of Energy
1
An Energy Analogy
• If you have $100, you could store it in a
variety of forms—cash in your wallet, a
bank account, travelers’ checks, or gold
or silver coins.
• You could transfer that money to
different forms.
The Nature of Energy
1
An Energy Analogy
• You could deposit your cash into a bank
account or trade the cash for gold.
• Regardless of its form, money is money.
• The same is true for energy.
• Energy from the Sun that warms you and
energy from the food that you eat are
only different forms of the same thing.
The Nature of Energy
1
Kinetic Energy
• An object in motion does have energy.
• Kinetic energy is the energy a moving object
has because of its motion.
• The kinetic energy of a moving object
depends on the object’s mass and its speed.
The Nature of Energy
1
Kinetic Energy
• The SI unit of energy is the joule,
abbreviated J.
• If you dropped a softball from a height of
about 0.5m, it would have a kinetic energy of
about one joule before it hit the floor.
The Nature of Energy
1
Potential Energy
• Even motionless
objects can have
energy. This
energy is stored
in the object.
• A hanging apple
in a tree has
stored energy.
The Nature of Energy
1
Potential Energy
• Stored energy due
to position is
called potential
energy.
• If the apple stays
in the tree, it will
keep the stored
energy due to its
height above the
ground.
The Nature of Energy
1
Potential Energy
• If it falls, that
stored energy of
position is
converted to
energy of motion.
The Nature of Energy
1
Elastic Potential Energy
• If you stretch a rubber band and let it
go, it sails across the room.
• As it flies through the air, it has kinetic
energy due to its motion.
• Where did this kinetic energy come
from?
The Nature of Energy
1
Elastic Potential Energy
• The stretched rubber band had energy
stored as elastic potential energy.
• Elastic potential energy is energy
stored by something that can stretch or
compress, such as a rubber band or
spring.
The Nature of Energy
1
Chemical Potential Energy
• Gasoline stores energy in the same
way as food stores energy—in the
chemical bonds between atoms.
• Energy stored in chemical bonds is
chemical potential energy.
The Nature of Energy
1
Chemical Potential Energy
• Energy is stored in the bonds that hold the
carbon and hydrogen atoms together and is
released when the gas is burned.
• In this chemical reaction, chemical potential
energy is released.
The Nature of Energy
1
Gravitational Potential Energy
• Anything that can fall has stored energy
called gravitational potential energy.
• Gravitational potential energy (GPE)
is energy stored by objects due to their
position above Earth’s surface.
The Nature of Energy
1
Gravitational Potential Energy
• Gravitational potential energy can be
calculated from the following equation.
• On Earth the acceleration of gravity is
9.8 m/s2, and has the symbol g.
• Like all forms of energy, gravitational
potential energy is measured in joules.
The Nature of Energy
1
Changing GPE
• According to the equation for gravitational
potential energy, the GPE of an object can
be increased by increasing its height above
the ground.
• If two objects are at the same height, then
the object with the larger mass has more
gravitational potential energy.
Section Check
1
Question 1
Energy is the ability to cause __________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
change
heat
motion
work
FL: SC.B.1.4.1
Section Check
1
Answer
The answer is A. Energy is the ability to
cause change and has several different
forms.
FL: SC.B.1.4.1
Section Check
1
Question 2
What are the four different forms of energy?
Answer
The four different forms of energy are electrical,
chemical, radiant and thermal.
Section Check
1
Question 3
The kinetic energy of an object depends on
__________.
A.
B.
C.
D.
the object’s mass and speed
the object’s mass
the object’s speed
the acceleration of the object
Section Check
1
Answer
The answer is A. Kinetic energy depends on
both the mass and speed of the moving object.
Conservation of Energy
2
Changing Forms of Energy
• More likely to think of energy as race cars
roar past or as your body uses energy from
food to help it move, or as the Sun warms
your skin on a summer day.
• These situations involve energy changing
from one form to another form.
Conservation of Energy
2
Transforming Electrical Energy
• Lightbulbs transform electrical energy into
light so you can see.
• The warmth you feel around the bulb is
evidence that
some of that
electrical
energy is
transformed
into thermal
energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Transforming Chemical Energy
• Fuel stores energy in the form of chemical
potential energy.
• The engine transforms the chemical potential
energy stored in gasoline molecules into the
kinetic energy of a moving car or bus.
Conservation of Energy
2
Transforming Chemical Energy
• Several energy conversions occur in this
process.
• In a car, a spark plug
fires, initiating the
conversion of chemical
potential energy into
thermal energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Transforming Chemical Energy
• As the hot gases expand,
thermal energy is
converted into kinetic
energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Transforming Chemical Energy
• Some energy transformations are less
obvious because they do not result in
visible motion, sound,
heat, or light.
• Every green plant
you see converts
light energy from the
Sun into energy
stored in chemical
bonds in the plant.
Conservation of Energy
2
Conversions Between Kinetic
and Potential Energy
• You have experienced many situations
that involve conversions between
potential and kinetic energy.
• To understand the energy conversions
that occur, it is helpful to identify the
mechanical energy of a system.
Conservation of Energy
2
Conversions Between Kinetic
and Potential Energy
• Mechanical energy is the total amount
of potential and kinetic energy in a
system and can be expressed by this
equation:
mechanical energy = potential energy + kinetic energy
Conservation of Energy
2
Falling Objects
• An apple on a tree has gravitational
potential energy due
to Earth pulling
down on it.
• The instant the apple
comes loose from the
tree, it accelerates
due to gravity.
Conservation of Energy
2
Falling Objects
• As it falls, it loses height so its
gravitational potential
energy decreases.
• This potential energy
is transformed into
kinetic energy as the
velocity of the apple
increases.
Conservation of Energy
2
Falling Objects
• If the potential energy is being converted
into kinetic energy, then the mechanical
energy of the apple doesn’t change as it
falls.
• The potential energy that the apple loses
is gained back as kinetic energy.
• The form of energy changes, but the total
amount of energy remains the same.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Transformations in
Projectile Motion
• Energy transformations also occur
during projectile motion when an object
moves in a curved path.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Transformations in
Projectile Motion
• However, the mechanical energy of the ball
remains constant as it rises and falls.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Transformations in
a Swing
• When you ride on a swing part of the fun is
the feeling of almost falling as you drop
from the highest
point to the lowest
point of the swing’s
path.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Transformations in
a Swing
• The ride starts with a push that gets you
moving, giving you kinetic energy.
• As the swing rises, you lose speed but
gain height.
• In energy terms, kinetic energy changes
to gravitational potential energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Transformations in
a Swing
• At the top of your path, potential energy is
at its greatest.
• Then, as the swing accelerates downward,
potential energy changes to kinetic
energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Law of Conservation
of Energy
• Energy can change from one form to
another, but the total amount of energy
never changes.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Law of Conservation
of Energy
• Even when energy changes form from
electrical to thermal and other energy forms
as in the hair
dryer shown
energy is never
destroyed.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Law of Conservation
of Energy
• This principle is recognized as a law
of nature.
• The law of conservation of energy
states that energy cannot be created
or destroyed.
Conservation of Energy
2
Conserving Resources
• You might have heard about energy
conservation or been asked to
conserve energy.
• These ideas are related to reducing the
demand for electricity and gasoline,
which lowers the consumption of energy
resources such as coal and fuel oil.
Conservation of Energy
2
Conserving Resources
• The law of conservation of energy, on
the other hand, is a universal principle
that describes what happens to energy
as it is transferred from one object to
another or as it is transformed.
Conservation of Energy
2
Is energy always conserved?
• While coasting along a flat road on a bicycle,
you know that you will eventually stop if you
don’t pedal.
• If energy is
conserved, why
wouldn’t your
kinetic energy
stay constant so
that you would
coast forever?
Conservation of Energy
2
The Effect of Friction
• You know from
experience that if
you don’t continue
to pump a swing
or be pushed by
somebody else,
your arcs will
become lower and
you eventually
will stop swinging.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Effect of Friction
• In other words, the mechanical (kinetic and
potential) energy of the swing seems to
decrease, as if the energy were being
destroyed. Is this a violation of the law of
conservation of energy?
Conservation of Energy
2
The Effect of Friction
• With every movement, the swing’s ropes or
chains rub on their hooks and air pushes on
the rider.
• Friction and air
resistance cause
some of the
mechanical energy
of the swing to
change to thermal
energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Effect of Friction
• With every pass of the swing, the
temperature of the hooks and the air
increases a little, so the mechanical
energy of the swing is not destroyed.
• Rather, it is transformed into thermal energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Converting Mass into Energy
• A special kind of energy conversion—nuclear
fusion—takes place
in the Sun and other
stars.
• During this process
a small amount of
mass is transformed
into a tremendous
amount of energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
Converting Mass into Energy
• In the reaction
shown here, the
nuclei of the
hydrogen isotopes
deuterium and
tritium undergo
fusion.
Conservation of Energy
2
Nuclear Fission
• In processes involving nuclear fission
and fusion, the total amount of energy
is still conserved
if the energy
content of the
masses involved
are included.
Conservation of Energy
2
Nuclear Fission
• Then the total energy before the reaction is
equal to the total
energy after the
reaction, as
required by the
law of
conservation of
energy.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Human Body—Balancing
the Energy Equation
• What forms of energy can you find in
the human body?
• With your right hand, reach up and feel
your left shoulder.
• With that simple action, stored potential
energy within your body was converted to
the kinetic energy of your moving arm.
Conservation of Energy
2
The Human Body—Balancing
the Energy Equation
• Some of the chemical potential energy
stored in your body is used to maintain
a nearly constant internal temperature.
• A portion of this energy also is converted
to the excess heat that your body gives
off to its surroundings.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Conversions in Your Body
• Your body stores energy in the form of
fat and other chemical compounds.
• This chemical potential energy is used to
fuel the processes that keep you alive,
such as making your heart beat and
digesting the food you eat.
Conservation of Energy
2
Energy Conversions in Your Body
• Your body also
converts this energy
to heat that is
transferred to your
surroundings, and
you use this energy
to make your body
move.
Conservation of Energy
2
Food Energy
• The food Calorie (C) is a unit used by
nutritionists to measure how much energy
you get from various foods—1 C is
equivalent to about 4,184 J.
• Every gram of fat a person consumes can
supply 9 C of energy.
• Carbohydrates and proteins each supply
about 4 C of energy per gram.
Reviewing Main Ideas
2
Conservation of Energy
• The total amount of kinetic energy and
gravitational potential energy in a system
is the mechanical energy of the system:
mechanical energy = KE + GPE
• The law of conservation of energy states
that energy never can be created or
destroyed. The total amount of energy in
the universe is constant.
Section Check
2
Question 1
Mechanical energy is the total amount of
_________ in a system.
A.
B.
C.
D.
kinetic energy
momentum
potential energy
potential and kinetic
Section Check
2
Answer
The answer is D. Mechanical energy is the
energy due to position and motion of all
objects in a system.
Section Check
2
Question 2
State the law of conservation of energy.
Answer
The law of conservation of energy states that
energy cannot be created or destroyed.
FL: SC.B.1.4.2
Section Check
2
Question 3
Friction converts __________ energy into
___________ energy.
A.
B.
C.
D.
electrical, thermal
mechanical, thermal
thermal, electrical
thermal, mechanical
FL: SC.B.1.4.2
Section Check
2
Answer
The answer is B. Friction converts mechanical
energy into thermal energy.
FL: SC.B.1.4.2
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